wolfgang ziegler

Office Dashboard in a Picture Frame

How it started

A while ago, I built this dashboard for our family that keeps our important appointments, birthdays, family photos and much more at a glance.

I decided that I wanted a similar thing in my office where I can extend it later to also show e.g. work relevant information, tech news, Twitter feeds, ...

The Software

For that I used dashydash the project I had specifically developed for my family dashboard. It's based on Node.js and React
and is simply a browser application running in Kiosk Mode.

The Hardware

The most important part here was obviously the display. I decided to go a cheaper route this time and simply harvested the panel of a broken laptop (similar to the Magic Mirror project I once did). Of course, using a laptop display panel meant having to buy a driver board for it, which was the only actual expense it had to make and I found one for 32€ on eBay.

Make sure to carefully check the model number of your display and get the correct driver board for it!

The rest of the hardware and parts I had readily available (including the Raspberry Pi 3).

Part List

Here’s the complete list of parts I used for this build:

Laptop Display Panel (some friend or family member always has a broken laptop you can harvest)

IKEA Ribba Frame (7€)

Display Driver Board (32€)

12V Power Adapter for the Display Driver Board (~ 20€)

Raspberry Pi 3 (35€)

5V Power Adapter for the Raspberry Pi (5€)

Short HDMI cable (6€)

Putting it together

The first step was making a cutout for the display panel which would fit nicely into the frame.

All the electronic components (display driver, Raspberry Pi, power adapter) I mounted on the back cover of the Ribba frame.

Then I out both display panel and the back cover holding the electronics into the frame.

For wall-mounting I found and 3D printed these hooks that have been specifically designed for IKEA Ribba frames.

Everything put together, I mounted it to the wall in my office.

Automated on/off with openHAB

In order to save energy and not have this dashboard running all the time, I connected it to a smart socket I can control via openHAB, the home automation platform I am using. I then created two openHAB rules for it.

The first rule monitors the office light switch (Licht_Buero) and if it is turned on after 7 PM (this is when I am usually working), the dashboard (PicturePi) is turned on as well.